The actor and artist, 57, depicted elder Nathan Phillips playing his drum while being surrounded by several Kentucky students who mocked, stuck out their tongues and recorded the incident on a phone covered by a patriotic-themed case.

Carrey's drawing appears to include 17-year-old student Nicholas Sandmann, who stood face-to-face with Phillips in the viral video, replacing the teen's red MAGA hat with one that reads "hate again."

The group of MAGA-wearing students, who attended the anti-abortion March for Life in Washington, drew widespread criticism over the viral clip, prompting their school and the Diocese of Covington to issue an apology.

However, additional video footage that surfaced painted another story of the encounter that seemed to show a group of four or five Black Hebrew Israelites as the aggressors.

Jim Carrey is taking on the controversial encounter between Covington Catholic High School students and a Native American elder in his latest artwork.(Photo11: Jordan Strauss, Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)

"Halloween" actress Jamie Lee Curtis acknowledged there are "two sides to every story" and admitted she "made a snap judgement" after viewing an initial picture.

"I know better than to judge a book by its cover. I wasn’t there. I shouldn’t have commented," she said on Twitter Sunday, attaching a statement from Sandmann. "I’m glad there wasn’t violence. I hope theses two men can meet and find common ground as can WE ALL!"

There are two sides to every story. I made a snap judgment based on a photograph & I know better than to judge a book by its cover. I wasn’t there. I shouldn’t have commented. I’m glad there wasn’t violence. I hope theses two men can meet and find common ground as can WE ALL! pic.twitter.com/R20v9ot2Ey

Carrey says he sympathizes with Jeff's need to balance that public persona with his personal life. “It’s a conundrum for people like me, or anybody in a position like Jeff Pickles, to have those things go on at the same time you have to present an image to people. That’s a terrible burden when some giant monster is welling up inside you." Robert Hanashiro, USA Today

Children of the crew members on the set often remembered him from his 2000 movie "The Grinch." Carrey would often have fun with them by showing them one of his many expressive looks. "I go, ‘I am The Grinch. Do you want to see the face?’" Robert Hanashiro, USA Today